Businessman David Langat. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- Two companies linked to billionaire businessman David Langat, have filed a petition seeking to block Transnational Bank from attaching a parcel of land they used as security for a disputed Sh134 million loan.
- Koima Developers Ltd and Koisagat Tea Estate Ltd also want the bank restrained from issuing or advancing adverse notices to any licensed credit reference bureau (CRB) in regard to the contested debt and arrears purported to have accrued from it.
- The two firms claim that Transnational Bank unfairly targets the land worth more than Sh500 million yet they only owed the lender Sh46 million and not Sh134 million as alleged by the bank.
Two companies linked to billionaire businessman David Langat,
have filed a petition seeking to block Transnational Bank from attaching
a parcel of land they used as security for a disputed Sh134 million
loan.
Koima Developers Ltd and Koisagat Tea Estate Ltd
also want the bank restrained from issuing or advancing adverse notices
to any licensed credit reference bureau (CRB) in regard to the contested
debt and arrears purported to have accrued from it.
The
two firms claim that Transnational Bank unfairly targets the land worth
more than Sh500 million yet they only owed the lender Sh46 million and
not Sh134 million as alleged by the bank.
In a suit
filed at the High Court in Mombasa, the companies say that they remain
committed to clearing the loan secured in 2015 to finance their working
capital requirements as demonstrated by the repayment of Sh20.9 million
between February and March alone.
This, they argue,
pushed their overall repayment to more than two-thirds of the entire
loan despite economic challenges due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
“Due to its financial constraints, the companies have on several
occasions attempted to negotiate restructuring of the loan to complete
repayment. However, the bank denied the request,” argue the companies in
their suit documents.
The two firms claimed that the
bank denied their request to have the loan restructured contrary to
Central Bank of Kenya’s (CBK) directives on mitigation of adverse
effects on borrowers from the Covid-19 pandemic.
The
companies say that on or about August, they learnt of an alleged notice
in respect of a charge over the land as a guarantor in favour of DL
Koisagat Ltd as borrower.
The notice, they claim, was not served on them.
According
to the notice, a sale was to take place 40 days from the service to
recover the disputed amount of money inclusive of interest and
penalties.
“The plaintiffs have at all material times
been and remain willing to offset and settle the rightful amounts that
are due to the defendant in lieu of the arrears for the facility
granted,” they say in court documents.
The companies
said that since they had already re-paid more than two thirds of the
entire loan, the lender should be compelled to seek permission from the
court to attach or sell off the land parcel or any of their properties.
The
plaintiffs further claim that the bank had threatened to forward the
claimed debt to a CRB, plans they termed malicious and would tarnish
their names and prevent them from obtaining credit facilities for seven
years.
Mr Langat has often kept off the public limelight.
But media reports in the past cast him as a key campaign financier to many of current and former Rift Valley politicians.
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